Books on the topic 'Iraqi Arabs'

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1

Ronny, Someck, Lagny Isabelle, and Eckhard Elial Michel, eds. Bagdad - Jérusalem: À la lisière de l'incendie. Paris: Bruno Doucey, 2012.

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2

Ajami, Fouad. The foreigner's gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq. New York: Free Press, 2006.

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3

Alim, Mehboob. Safarnama Iraq Arab. Lahore: Atish Fashan, 1994.

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4

William, Thompson. Iraq. Broomall, PA: Mason Crest Publishers, 2009.

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5

William, Thompson. Iraq. Philadelphia: Mason Crest, 2015.

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6

Simons, Chaim. Edward Norman's plan to transfer Arabs from Palestine to Iraq. Kiryat Arba, Israel: Nansen Institute, 1991.

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7

Imāmī, Salīm Shākir. al- Jaysh al-ʻIraqī wa-ḥarb tishrīn 1973. London: Dār al-Ḥikmah, 2001.

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8

Bell, Gertrude Lowthian. Iraq and Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2008.

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9

Bell, Gertrude Lowthian. Iraq and Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2008.

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10

Buṭṭī, Fāʼiq. al-Ṣiḥāfah al-ʻIrāqīyah fī al-manfá. 8th ed. Dimashq: Dār al-Madá lil-Thaqāfah wa-al-Nashr, 2006.

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11

Thesiger, Wilfred. The Marsh Arabs. New York: Penguin Group USA, Inc., 2009.

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12

Ḥamdānī, Ṣalāḥ. Deux enfants de Bagdad: Entretiens avec Gilles Rozier. Paris: Les Arènes, 2015.

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13

Breaking all the rules: Palestine, Iraq, Iran, and the case for impeachment. Atlanata, GA: Clarity Press, 2008.

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14

Jabbar, Ali. Art in Iraq today: Part V. Dubai: Meem Gallery, 2011.

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15

Ghaib, Ghassan. Art in Iraq today: Part II. Dubai: Meem Gallery, 2010.

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16

Saʼad, Marwan. Arab regional system and inter-Arab conflicts: The Iraqi-Kuwaiti crises of 1961 and 1990. [Yamato-machi, Minami-Uonuma-gun, Niigata-ken, Japan]: IMES, International University of Japan, 1992.

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17

Kechichian, Joseph A., ed. Iran, Iraq, and the Arab Gulf States. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-63443-9.

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18

A, Kechichian Joseph, and Gustave E. von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies, eds. Iran, Iraq, and the Arab Gulf States. New York: Palgrave, 2001.

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19

L, Jarman Robert, and Great Britain Foreign Office, eds. Political diaries of the Arab world, Iraq. [Slough]: Archive Editions, 1998.

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20

Ahmed, Modhir. Art in Iraq today: Part I. Dubai: Meem Gallery, 2010.

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21

Wien, Peter. Iraqi Arab nationalism: Authoritarian, totalitarian and pro-fascist inclinations, 1932-1941. New York: Routledge, 2006.

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22

Al-Khalidi, Ashraf. Iraqi refugees in the Syrian Arab Republic: A field-based snapshot. Washington, D.C: The Brookings-Bern Project on Internal Displacement, 2007.

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23

Ahmed, Mohammed M. A. America unravels Iraq: Kurds, Shiites, and Sunni Arabs compete for supremacy. Costa Mesa, CA: Mazda Publishers, 2009.

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24

Ahmed, Mohammed M. A. America unravels Iraq: Kurds, Shiites, and Sunni Arabs compete for supremacy. Costa Mesa, Calif: Mazda Publishers, 2010.

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25

Katsab, Nuzhat. Senuniyot ha-shalom.: ʻim ha-nashim ha-ʻArviyot ṿeha-Deruziyot be-Yiśraʾel. Or Yehudah: Sifriyat Maʻariv, 1998.

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26

Katsab, Nuzhat. Bashāʼir al-salām: Maʻa al-marʼah al-ʻArabīyah wa-al-Duruzīyah fī Isrāʼīl. [Israel: s.n.], 1999.

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27

Chatelard, G. Incentives to transit: Policy responses to influxes of Iraqi forced migrants in Jordan. Badia Fiesolana, San Domenico (FI): European University Institute, 2002.

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28

Khan, Javed Ahmad. Iraq reconstruction: The Arab's response to an imperial design. Delhi: Manak Publications, 2008.

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29

Sfeir, Antoine. Vers l'orient compliqué: Les Américains et le monde arabe. Paris: Grasset, 2006.

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30

Yaḥya, Nazar. Bird land. Amman: Karim Gallery, 2007.

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31

Charles, Davies, ed. After the war: Iran, Iraq, and the Arab Gulf. Chichester: Carden Publications, 1990.

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32

Baram, Amatzia. Who are the insurgents?: Sunni Arab rebels in Iraq. Washington, DC: U.S. Institute of Peace, 2005.

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33

James, Peters. The Arab world handbook: Arabian Peninsula and Iraq edition. 3rd ed. London: Stacey International, 2009.

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34

Iraqi Marshlands and the Marsh Arabs: The Ma'dan, Their Culture and the Environment. Ithaca Press, 2010.

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35

Joshua, Castellino, and Cavanaugh Kathleen A. 4 Minority Rights in Iraq. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199679492.003.0004.

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This chapter seeks to examine and analyse the history and legislative provisions to protect minorities in Iraq. It situates Iraq’s minority communities (Kurds, Kaka’i, Shabak, Yezidi, Marsh Arabs, Christian, Armenian, Assyrian, Sabean Mandaeans, Baha’i, Black Iraqi, Circassians, Jews, Roma and Palestinian) within a socio-legal framework and includes a critique of the fragile unfolding constitution-building process and the conceptual frameworks upon which it has been built. The ‘liquid’ democracy that was meant to accompany the 2003 intervention has proved illusory for Iraqi communities inside and outside Iraq. There can be no other reading of the 2003 US and coalition forces’ intervention in Iraq other than that of a ‘transformative occupation’, which has operated outside the constraints dictated by the laws of occupation. The language of occupation may have been displaced, but the transformation of the political and demographic landscape in Iraq continues and this chapter examines the implications of this for the groups who continue to feel vulnerable within Iraq.
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36

Crane, Ken R. Iraqi Refugees in the United States. NYU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479873944.001.0001.

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There are numerous and trenchant accounts of the tragic and disastrous Iraq War (2003–2011), which focus on its financial, human, and political cost to the US. Less has been written about the human cost to the Iraqi people in the largest displacement in the Middle East since 1948. Few Americans are cognizant that over three million Iraqis, many facing violence due to their cooperation with the US invasion and occupation, fled Iraq and that 124,159 were resettled in the US from 2008 to 2015 after an intense lobbying effort by former aid personnel and veterans. This ethnographic study explores the cartography of belonging for Iraqi refugees within a specific cultural geography—California’s Latinx-majority communities of southeastern California (known as the Inland Empire). The fieldwork in the IE spans a particular geopolitical era of resettlement mobilization, the Great Recession, and the December 2, 2015, terrorist attack in San Bernardino. The attack was immediately followed by candidate Donald Trump’s naming of Arab and Muslim refugees (including Iraqis) as threats to national security. With the mainstreaming of Islamophobia during the presidential election, the United States ceased to be a free space of religious and communal expression. Drawing on seven years of fieldwork with fifty Iraqi refugees, this book is a witness to how the felt sense of belonging—cultural citizenship—is negotiated within the social spaces of work, family, faith community.
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37

Wien, Peter. Iraqi Arab Nationalism. Routledge, 2007.

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38

Ajami, Fouad. Foreigner's Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq. Simon & Schuster, Limited, 2006.

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39

Al-Hassan, Hawraa. Women, Writing and the Iraqi Ba'thist State. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474441759.001.0001.

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The book examines the trajectory of the state sponsored novel in Iraq and considers the ways in which explicitly political and/or ideological texts functioned as resistive counter narratives. It argues that both the novel and ‘progressive’ discourses on women were used as markers of Iraq’s cultural revival under the Ba‘th and were a key element in the state’s propaganda campaign within Iraq and abroad. In an effort to expand its readership and increase support for its pan-Arab project, the Iraqi Ba‘th almost completely eradicated illiteracy among women. As Iraq was metaphorically transformed into a ‘female’, through its nationalist trope, women writers simultaneously found opportunities and faced obstacles from the state, as the ‘Woman Question’ became a site of contention between those who would advocate the progressiveness of the Ba‘th and those who would stress its repressiveness and immorality. By exploring discourses on gender in both propaganda and high art fictional writings by Iraqis, this book offers an alternative narrative of the literary and cultural history of Iraq. It ultimately expands the idea of cultural resistance beyond the modern/traditional, progressive/backward paradigms that characterise discourses on Arab women and the state, and argues that resistance is embedded in the material form of texts as much as their content or ideological message.
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40

Cohen, Richard I., ed. Judy Jaffe-Schagen, Having and Belonging: Homes and Museums in Israel. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016. x + 221 pp. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190912628.003.0023.

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This chapter reviews the book Having and Belonging: Homes and Museums in Israel (2016), by Judy Jaffe-Schagen. In Having and Belonging, Jaffe-Schagen explores the connection between identity, material culture, and location. Focusing on eight cases involving Chabad, religious Zionists, Moroccan Jews, Iraqi Jews, Ethiopian Jews, Russian Jews, Christian Arabs, and Muslim Arabs, the book shows how various minority groups in Israel are represented through objects and material culture in homes and museums. According to Jaffe-Schagen, in the politicized cultural landscape of borderless Israel, location not only affects the interplay between objects and people but can also provide important insights about citizenship. Her main argument is that the nation-state of Israel is not a multicultural society because it has failed to serve as a cultural “melting pot” for the various immigration groups.
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41

Ajami, Fouad. The Foreigner's Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq. Free Press, 2006.

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42

Ajami, Fouad. The Foreigner's Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq. Free Press, 2007.

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43

Thesiger, Wilfred, and Jon Lee Anderson. Marsh Arabs. Penguin Books, Limited, 2007.

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44

Buckland-Wright, John. Folktales From Iraq. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005.

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45

Marinova, Nadejda K. Ask What You Can Do For Your (New) Country. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190623418.001.0001.

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This book focuses on a previously unexamined phenomenon: how host governments utilize diasporas to advance their foreign policy agendas in mutually beneficial ways. The book advances a four-factor theoretical model to analyze the phenomenon for when this occurs, and it delves into the multiple avenues across which it takes place, in a variety of regimes, and across political, security, and commercial matters, proposing a classification with examples worldwide. It shows how, with the endorsement of the host government, select diaspora groups become spokespersons for a heterogeneous diaspora at large, advancing their interests and those of the host state. The contribution is grounded in research on diaspora and migration, ethnic lobbies, and transnationalism. The eight cases of testing the model include the Lebanese-American diaspora on policy toward Syria and Lebanon under George W. Bush, including UN Security Council Resolution 1559 and the Syria Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty Restoration Act; the Iraqi National Congress and the US administration in “selling” the 2003 Iraq war to the US and international public; the two ends of the political spectrum of Cuban-American organizations on Cuba policy under Presidents Carter and Reagan; the Iranian government’s use of Shi’i clerics from the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (1982–2003) vis-à-vis Iraq and with Iraqi refugees and prisoners of war. In commercial matters, it includes the multidiaspora International Diaspora Engagement Alliance (IdEA) of the US State Department (2011–) directed at homeland development; and the Brazilian state and Syro-Lebanese members of the Arab-Brazilian Chamber of Commerce since the 1970s, as an intermediary with the Arab League.
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46

Karam, N. Business Laws of Iraq, 1987: Arab Business Law, Iraq. Graham & Trotman, Limited, 1987.

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47

Wien, Peter. Iraqi Arab Nationalism: Authoritarian, Totalitarian and Pro-Fascist Inclinations, 1932-1941. Taylor & Francis Group, 2008.

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48

Wien, Peter. Iraqi Arab Nationalism: Authoritarian, Totalitarian and Pro-Fascist Inclinations, 1932-1941. Taylor & Francis Group, 2008.

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49

Bashkin, Orit. The Lamp, Qasim Amin, Jewish Women and Baghdadi Men: A Reading in the Jewish Iraqi Journal al-Misbah. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474430616.003.0012.

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This chapter provides a detailed reading of al-Misbah, a Jewish Iraqi publication which appeared in Baghdad between the years 1924 and 1929 and has been characterised both as a Zionist mouthpiece and a testimony to the success of Arab nationalism. In addressing this apparent contradiction, the chapter examines the issues which dominated its pages in order to highlight the identity of the paper and to enrich our understanding of the Iraqi press under the British Mandate. The chapter addresses two discursive circles – the Iraqi and the Jewish – and proposes that al-Misbah conveyed an unmistakable Iraqi and Arab identity. Despite the editor’s Zionist inclinations, the conversations between readers and writers acquired a life of their own and the paper, in fact, promoted a new Arab Jewish identity and illustrated how Jews sought to use state institutions as venues for the cultivation of non-sectarian and democratic citizenship.
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50

Rich, Paul. Arab War Lords and Iraqi Star Gazers: Gertrude Bell's the Arab of Mesopotamia. Authors Choice Press, 2001.

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